Chapter 17
Chapter 17
Chapter 17
Debt Ratio
Interest payments on debt are tax deductible…
However, the tradeoff is that the probability of
bankruptcy will rise as interest expenses increases.
Preferential
Larger size treatment from
creditors &
Greater access smaller per unit
to international flotation costs
capital markets
Possible access Cost of
International to low-cost capital
diversification foreign financing
Exposure to
exchange rate Probability of
risk bankruptcy
Exposure to
country risk
• The capital asset pricing model (CAPM)
can be used to assess how the required
rates of return of MNCs differ from those of
purely domestic firms.
• CAPM: ke =Rf + β (Rm – Rf )
where ke = the required return on a
stock
Rf = risk-free rate of return
Rm = market return
β = the beta of the stock
• A stock’s beta represents the sensitivity
of the stock’s returns to market returns,
just as a project’s beta represents the
sensitivity of the project’s cash flows to
market conditions.
• The lower a project’s beta, the lower its
systematic risk, and the lower its
required rate of return, if its
unsystematic risk can be diversified
away.
• An MNC that increases its foreign sales may
be able to reduce its stock’s beta, and hence
reduce the required return.
• However, some MNCs consider unsystematic
project risk to be important in determining a
project’s required return.
• Hence, we cannot say whether an MNC will
have a lower cost of capital than a purely
domestic firm in the same industry.
• The cost of capital can vary across
countries, such that:
MNCs based in some countries have a
competitive advantage over others;
MNCs may be able to adjust their
international operations and sources of
funds to capitalize on the differences; and
MNCs based in some countries tend to use
a debt-intensive capital structure.
• A firm’s cost of debt is determined by:
the prevailing risk-free interest rate of the
borrowed currency, and
the risk premium required by creditors.